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Our Villages and Hamlets

Rideau Lakes is a community of Villages and Hamlets. Explore and learn about the landscape and the people. Each village and hamlet have a unique culture and story to tell. Whether you’re a visitor looking to discover your roots in the area, a family trying out an adventure on the water, or an urbanite seeking a safe and quiet, rural lifestyle… Rideau Lakes will find a place in your heart.

For thousands of years before European settlers arrived in what is now called Rideau Lakes, Algonquin speaking peoples, the Massasauga and proto-Hurons lived in these lands. Indigenous artifacts have been discovered around all of the lakes throughout this area, some that are more than 9000 years old. When the European settlers arrived, just over 200 years ago, the communities of Rideau Lakes were born.

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Celebrate the glory of springtime in Rideau Lakes, a perfect time to witness emerging blooms, bouncing baby animals, explore spring…
Thursday, 06 March 2025 13:29

Newboro Memorial Park

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Newboro’s ‘Memorial Park’ is a tribute to a group of World War 2 veterans who chose a far-sighted approach regarding the disposal of monies raised during the war years for their wellbeing. Newboro has greatly benefitted from their decision, plus the work of dedicated volunteers who yearly ensured that the veterans’ intentions for the community were maintained and expanded. Together they have enriched the lives of Newboro’s citizens.

The first recorded usage of the land now occupied by Memorial Park was in the 1850s, following a meeting held in the Newboro school house resulting in the formation of the North Crosby Agricultural Society. The resultant annual September fair, on land at the east end of the village, was to be ‘a cattle show, and all stock, implements of husbandry and horticulture, seeds and plants, grains, vegetables, fruits, butter, cheese, articles of manufacture would be exhibited’. Included would be a track for horse races.

Soon after the initial fair, plans were afoot to place a hall on the grounds. In 1868, the North Crosby Council approved an expenditure of $200 to the Agricultural Society for the purpose of building a hall (later named Victoria Hall) at the fairgrounds.

One can imagine the great anticipation for this yearly festive occasion: ‘a gala day in delightful surroundings’. A 1901 newspaper account described the Newboro fair saying:

[I]t boasts the most beautiful of any exhibit grounds in the riding. Thanks to the North Crosby Agricultural Society, the grounds have been recently groomed and improved. The Society has established the fair in a grove of black oak and pine trees. With private subscriptions, enough money had been raised to build a new horse racing track. There were fresh pens for the livestock, sheds for displaying root vegetables and a hall for Ladies Exhibits. As well, the Society had great plans for the fair: there would be foot runs, a carrier pigeon race and games of catching a greased pig, with a purse of $60.00 [a huge sum then] for the winner of a three-minute boxing match.

This exhibition hall was utilized as a display area during fair day, as well as by the Newboro Simpson Masonic Lodge and the Newboro Womens Institute as their meeting place.

However the Newboro Fair ended, likely due to the depopulation of rural areas following World War 1. By 1923, when a major fire destroyed many buildings on Drummond Street (Highway 42), the Masons opted to move the building (probably no longer utilized for fair purposes) to the corner of Carleton and Drummond Streets. Here it became a centre for community events, as it is in 2025.

The ‘fair grounds’ property, continued to be of value to the community, especially with the purchase of additional land (and subsequent naming of the park) after World War 2. During the war the Soldiers Benefit Club had been formed with the intention that the funds raised through the activities of this club would be donated to returning soldiers (as had been done after WW1) for their personal use. By 1945, this club had ’a good balance of funds and had planned on giving each returning man a small token for their service in the second World War’.

However, in 1946, these veterans had other intentions for they preferred this money be expended for community uses. The total was subsequently transferred to a newly formed Newboro Social and Athletic Club. The Newboro Council purchased an additional 6 acres of land from Stanley Dier (former Graham farm), later acquiring the Newboro railway station lot for park purposes.

The first project was the construction of a rink: in 1946, the men of the village commenced with the purchase of lumber, with some public-spirited citizens assisting with the costs. The club sponsored a hockey team which, with Newboro’s reputation as an ardent hockey-supporting community, aided in financing the rink.

In 1948, the decision was made to re-commence the annual Newboro Water Carnival which had been in abeyance during the war. With funds from this first carnival, swings, a maypole and a slide were placed at the Newboro Public School. The Newboro Community Club, the amalgamation of the Newboro Social and Athletic Club, and the Water Carnival organization, worked towards the development of Memorial Park with the placement of fences, lights, bleachers, and playground equipment. Yearly the grounds, leased from Transport Canada, at the Lock were improved for use during the Water Carnival and by those visiting the Newboro lock station.

The Newboro Community Club sponsored hockey and baseball teams for boys and girls, hosted field days to raise funds, and in later years commenced baseball tournaments. Events at the Community Hall were part of the sponsored activities, such as amateur nights and Halloween parties.

Memorial Park exists because of the aspirations of the fall fair agricultural community, Newboro Council, and the generosity and goodwill of both returning veterans and Newboro’s citizens as they laboured together for the betterment of their society and its young people.

Diane Haskins (with appreciation to the meticulous record keeping of Olive Taylor Adams)

The story of Cheney’s Corners starts with the Pennock family. Chapman Pennock, whose family originally had come from Vermont, married Irene Deming and within three years in 1811 settled in this area. Pennock as well as farming worked as the first teacher in South Crosby in a school which was probably in this area. In addition to this he worked as a township clerk in the early 19th century. Chapman and Irene had a large family – ten boys and two girls.

Monday, 12 August 2024 12:43

Effie Tett Place

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Effie_Tett_Place.jpeg 

Address: 14 Drummond Street, Newboro, ON

At this welcoming park located on the main street of Newboro, you will find several monuments and information panels about Newboro and its history. The most distinctive is a large cenotaph listing Newboro residents that were enlisted or killed during World War 1 and World War 2. There is a memorial dedicated to Newboro pioneers. A provincial plaque by Ontario Heritage Trust commemorates the Founding of Newboro, flanked by 2 storyboards, “Historic Newboro” and “Newboro: An Historic Centre for Sport Fishing.” Finally, a small white pavilion is located at the rear of the property, in honour of Effie Tett.

Effie Gallagher Tett grew up in the village of Newboro, became a teacher, and married Benjamin Tett (grandson of Benjamin Tett, former Leeds M.P.). The couple spent most of their lives in the village. Throughout her life, Effie was an indefatigable supporter of St. Mary’s Anglican Church in Newboro, an observant correspondent for the Brockville Recorder and Times, a friend and supporter of village youth, and a vital member of the Newboro Womens’ Institute.

One of the major legacies of Womens’ Institutes across Ontario has been their unique capture and preservation of local history. The “Lady Tweedsmuir” books, as they became known, promoted by the wife of Lord Tweedsmuir, the Governor-General of Canada, and can be an invaluable resource for local history. Newboro was most fortunate as Effie Tett played a prominent role in this compilation for many years, with the result that the Newboro Lady Tweedsmuir book is outstanding for its record, written and photographic, of village events.

Effie donated a parcel of land, adjacent to her home, for use as a location for the village cenotaph, especially poignant since her husband’s brother, Arthur Tett, had died in 1917 as a participant in WW 1. A grateful village council later erected the pavilion in her memory. In recognition of her work with the Womens’ Institute, the organization placed a bronze plaque ‘In Memory of Effie M Tett’ near the pavilion.

This deeply loved and admired woman serves as a shining example to all volunteers in her commitment to her community. The naming of this small park in her honour is a fitting tribute to Effie Tett and to her leadership role in preserving Newboro’s heritage.

The recent reemergence of this space into a showplace for the village of Newboro under the care of the Township of Rideau Lakes and the work of the Newboro Beautification Committee, is observable to all passersby.

Monday, 12 August 2024 12:39

Heritage Park

Written by

Red_Brick_School_in_Elgin.jpegRed Brick School in Elgin

Location: 

44°36'31.7"N

-76°13'5.1"E

Address: 3 Halladay Street, Elgin, ON

This park offers a quiet place to rest to rest in the Village alongside the historic Red Brick School House. 

Opened in 1887, this charming two-room brick school, built by local contractor Fred Taber, replaced a smaller wood-frame building. School Section No. 5 in South Crosby is a very early example of the late 19th century campaign to improve Ontario's system of public education through the construction of better buildings. Committed to fostering social, moral and economic progress through formal classroom instruction, the province's Department of Education encouraged late Victorian era school boards to erect larger, more sophisticated schools. Although local officials were often reluctant to raise the taxes necessary to finance such expensive departmental initiatives, some forward-looking communities, such as Elgin, sponsored the construction of architecturally elaborate schools, which showcased their local pride and commitment to progress through education.

Restored by the Elgin and Area Heritage Society, this township owned building has been acknowledged as being of provincial historical value with the placement of the above Ontario Heritage Trust plaque.

The municipality of Rideau Lakes has undertaken a landscaping program within the park, continuing to enhance this property with foresight and care.

In 2015 the EAHS, with the assistance of the Canadian government, erected a plaque honouring soldiers of the N Platoon, 156th Battalion, who had trained in Elgin in 1915.

Positioned within the park are 2 distinctive benches commissioned by the EAHS in 2021. These pay tribute, through inset quotations and plaques, to former teachers and students of South Crosby schools.

Most of the Briar Hill area is located in the former township of the Rear of Leeds and Lansdowne but the present Fortune Line Road is shared with South Crosby Ward.

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Contact Us

Amy Schur
Development Services Analyst
1-800-928-2250 Ext. 285

Foster Elliott
Associate Planner
1-800-928-2250 Ext. 234

Tom Fehr
Manager of Development Services
1-800-928-2250 Ext. 236

 

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1439 County Road 8, Delta, ON K0E 1G0

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